Evaporation of As and Sn from Liquid Iron: Experiments and a Kinetic Model during Top-Blown Oxygen Steelmaking Process
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample Preparation
2.2. Experimental Apparatus and Procedure
3. A Preliminary Test
4. Evaporation of As and Sn from a droplet
4.1. Effect of C Content on As and Sn Evaporations
4.2. Effect of Temperature on As and Sn Evaporations
5. Evaporation of As and Sn from Liquid Iron during the Top-Blown Oxygen BOF Process
- (1)
- Ferrous scrap was charged into hot metal at the beginning of the BOF process with a top-blown oxygen lance. The scrap melts and the tramp elements in the scrap dissolve in the hot metal.
- (2)
- Once the oxygen blowing starts, some portion of hot metal splashes by forming small sizes of droplets. Each droplet stays out of the hot metal bath for a certain residence time (), which depends on the size and C content in the droplet. The temperature and C content in the droplets are different from those of the remaining hot metal bath. Those reported in the literature were used in the present study [21,22,23,27,28].
- (3)
- As and Sn evaporate during the steelmaking process. These elements were considered to evaporate both from the liquid bath and the ejected droplets, where the latter were thought to contribute considerably to the evaporation kinetics of these elements, due to the large surface-to-volume ratio and high temperature.
- (4)
- Two routes for the evaporation (liquid bath and droplets) for As and Sn take place independently, but the contents of these elements in the bath and the droplets are coupled with each other.
- (5)
- The droplet surface is open to the gas phase, thereby allowing free evaporation of As and Sn without physical blocking by BOF slag. This is not unlikely as the bloated droplets are covered by decarburized gas [21,29]. On the other hand, the other surface blocking (chemically) by surface adsorption of O [30] was neglected, as its effect would appear at the last stage of the reaction.
- (6)
5.1. Ejected Droplets (ED) during the Oxygen Blowing
5.1.1. Droplet Generation Rate
5.1.2. Residence Time of the Ejected Droplets ()
5.1.3. Mass of the Ejected Droplets ()
5.1.4. Area of the Ejected Droplets ()
5.1.5. Temperature Change of the Ejected Droplets
5.1.6. [pct C] of the Ejected Droplets
5.2. Liquid Bath in the Converter
5.3. Rate Constant
5.4. Evaporation Rate of As and Sn
- Wider reaction area than (Figure 11).
6. Discussions
7. Conclusions
- Evaporation rates of As and Sn from liquid iron were slow: a small crucible test showed that As and Sn hardly evaporated at 1400 C.
- The electromagnetic levitation test showed that the evaporation rates increased by increasing temperature and C content in the liquid iron. The evaporation rate constants (, ) were formulated as functions of temperature and C content using available thermodynamic data.
- Mass, volume, and surface area of liquid iron in a 200-tonne BOF during the top-blowing were modeled using available information in the literature. The surface area of the liquid increased enormously (up to ∼163 times). This increased the site for evaporation, thereby increasing the evaporation rates.
- Temperature of liquid steel at the impact zone was significantly high [23]. This resulted in high temperature in the ejected droplets, thereby increasing the evaporation rates.
- Considering the enlarged surface area and the high temperature of many numbers of ejected droplets could enhance the evaporation. However, due to the too-low vapor pressure of As and Sn, resultant evaporation rates were not acceptable in practical operation. This suggests additional actions, including increasing vapor pressure of the tramp elements, e.g., adding S and decreasing ambient pressure, etc.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Case | Temperature (C) | [pct C] | [pct As] | [pct Sn] | Crucible |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1-1 | 1680 (±10) | 2.0 | 0.18 | 0.18 | Magnesia |
1-2 | 3.9 | ||||
1-3 | 5.6 (sat.) | 0.16 | 0.19 | Graphite | |
2-1 | |||||
2-2 | 1720 (±10) | 5.8 (sat.) | |||
2-3 | 1760 (±10) | 5.9 (sat.) |
Input Parameters | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|
Diameter of converter | m | 6.7 [33] |
Lance height, | m | 1.8–2.5 (Figure 7) [27,32] |
Nozzle angle, | deg() | 17.5 [21] |
Throat radius of nozzle, | m | 0.017 [21] |
Exit radius of nozzle, | m | 0.023 [21] |
Number of nozzles, | - | 6 [27,32] |
Supply pressure, | Pa | 10 [21] |
Ambient pressure, | Pa | 10 [34] |
Oxygen flow rate, | Nm min | 620 [27,32] |
Mass of iron | tonne | 200 [27,32,33] |
Density of iron, | kg m | 7100 − 73.2 [pct C] − (0.828 − 0.0874 [pct C]) |
× (T − 1550) [26] | ||
Surface tension of iron, | N m | [(2367 ± 500) − 0.34 T ] / 1000 [35] |
Density of oxygen, | kg min | 1.429 at STP |
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Kim, D.-H.; Park, W.-B.; Park, S.-C.; Kang, Y.-B. Evaporation of As and Sn from Liquid Iron: Experiments and a Kinetic Model during Top-Blown Oxygen Steelmaking Process. Materials 2022, 15, 4771. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15144771
Kim D-H, Park W-B, Park S-C, Kang Y-B. Evaporation of As and Sn from Liquid Iron: Experiments and a Kinetic Model during Top-Blown Oxygen Steelmaking Process. Materials. 2022; 15(14):4771. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15144771
Chicago/Turabian StyleKim, Dong-Hyun, Won-Bum Park, Sang-Chae Park, and Youn-Bae Kang. 2022. "Evaporation of As and Sn from Liquid Iron: Experiments and a Kinetic Model during Top-Blown Oxygen Steelmaking Process" Materials 15, no. 14: 4771. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15144771
APA StyleKim, D. -H., Park, W. -B., Park, S. -C., & Kang, Y. -B. (2022). Evaporation of As and Sn from Liquid Iron: Experiments and a Kinetic Model during Top-Blown Oxygen Steelmaking Process. Materials, 15(14), 4771. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15144771